People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 February 1893 — Page 7

■ ISRSOULARITT. Is that what troubles you? Then it's easily and promptly remedied by Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They rego> late the system pen* fectly. TJake one for a gentle laxative or corrective; three for a cathartic. If you suffer from Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick or Billons Headaches, or any derangement of the liver, stomach, or bowels, try these little Pellets. They bring a permanent core. Instead of shocking and weakening the system with violence, like the ordinary pills. Qwy *®t in a perfectly easy and natural way. They’re the smallest, the easiest to take—and the cheapest, tor they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. “German Syrup” Boschee’s German £>yrup is more successful in the treatment of Consumption than any other remedy prescribed. It has been tried under every variety of climate. In the bleak, bitter North, in damp New England, in the fickle Middle States, in the hot, moist South —everywhere. It has been in demand by every nationality. It has been employed in stage of Consumption. In brief it has * been used by millions and its the only true and reliable Consumption Remedy. ® nR *ll MFP'C S^P fcoo^r KIDNEY LIVER B m R O Diabetes, Excessive quantity and high colored urine. La Grippe, Cures the bad after effects of,this trying epidemic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Impure Blood, Eczema,' scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness, Constitution oil run down, loss of ambition, stnd a disinclination to all sorts of work. Guarantee—Use contents of One Bottle, if not benefited , Druggists will refund you the price paid. At Druggists, 60c. Size, SI.OO Size. •Jnenlids* Guide to Health” free—Consultation free Db. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. T. Fresh Air and Exercise. Get all that’s possible of / both, if in j need of flesh <-/ strength and nerve force. There’s need,too, of plenty of fat-food. Stott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil builds up flesh and strength quicker than any other preparation known to science. Scott's Emulsion is constantly effecting Cure of Consumption , Eronchitis and kindred diseases rvhere other methods tail. Prepared by Scott & Bowno. N. V. AH druggists. Unlike the Dutch Process C& No Alkalies Ja-Si Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of fpfflC w - BAKER & CO.’S I aßreaMastCocoa H I, 1 1 |J which is absolutely tUJ [ J ||Mm pure and soluble. MB i ] ItMltl 1* has more than three times Rail i * §»: IP **? strength of Cocoa mixed 1 1. 1'!, with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and Is far more coo- , awnical, costing less than one cent a cup. It Is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold bf Grocers everywhere. V, BAKER &Cfl n Dorchester, Maw.

Dr B ULLSI (ough^rupl

Salvation Oil Nothing like m® SWIFTS SPECIFIC Is totally unlike anj other blood medicine. It cures diseaseso3 the blood and skin by removing the poison, and at the same time supplies good blood to th< pasted parts. Don’t be imposed on by substitutes, which are said to be just as good, it it IRTIE WORLD wonderful cures, or rciioved to much suffering. “ My blood was badly poisoned last year, whlct got my whole system out of -order—diseased and a constant source of suffering, no appetite and no enjoyment of life. Two bottles of |RB9Rn brought me right out. There is no KWfl tetter remedy for blood diseases. ■5«55f153 “John Gavin, Dayton, OJiio.» Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed fin* SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

A league of young ladies has beau formed in Shelbyville with thirty-one signers np to date, who aay they will ■ot wear hoopskirta. Edwin Stcabt, manager of the opera house, a prominent Elk and a wellknown actor, died at his home in Logansport, of paresis. He was buned in Chicago. " Hxnbt Nelson, a workman at the Stiner chilled plow works, in South Bend, was fatally injured by the fragments of a broken emery wheel One cheek was crushed, and the right eye Will have to be removed. Little river is np, and ten squares of Huntington are flooded. Albert Qliek’a i two-story house and a barn on Samuel Johnson’s property were demolished. Heavy ice did the business. The Cleveland clnb, of Indianapolis, has been assigned to the first division, next to Tammany, in the inaugural parade. At Martinsville Mrs. Jos. Felix, aged 85 years, fell bn the icy pavement a few days ago. She thought she was little, if any, hurt at first Later, one of her limbs turned real black and slie went to bed, dying in great agony. She left a husband and two children. A mail pouch thrown off at Orleans was cut open and robbed. The Fielding sisters, evangelists, are doing good work in the vicinity of West Fork. The people of Dublin are up in arms about the starting of a saloon there. The Indiana house of representatives passed a bill taxing the receipts of foreign building and loan associations, also subjecting them to inspection and requiring them to deposit 150,000 with the auditor to protect local shareholders. The new city directory will give Muncie a population of 19,763. The census report of ’BO gave Muncie 5,219. In '9O the population was 11,545; eighteen \ months ago the Emerson directory peo- i pie issued a book that gave the city ' about 14,000. The growth is wonderful. Milan is about to begin a bank. At a meeting held recently to inaugurate the enterprise ninety-one shares of stock were subscribed. Milan is a village of 300 to 400 inhabitants. There are banks at Versailles, Osgood and Batesville, in the same county. The body of Saloonlst Robinson was found in a gravel pit pond at Anderson, j Suicide. John P. Johnson and A S. Hughes, i were arrested at Columbus by a deputy United States marshal ior violation of the United States revenue laws. Chables E. Graves has been appoint- j ed receiver of the New Aveline house at j Fort Wayne, by consent of all parties concerned; and has taken charge of the I hotel. At a contest the other evening K. G. Davis of Crawfordsville, was chosen to represent Wabash college in the state oratorical contest His subject was '‘The Conflict of the Closing Century— Capital and Labor.” Otto Faulkknburg, upon a charge of assaulting John Underhill in the form of white-capping near Branchville on February 15, 1892, pleaded guilty the other morning in court. Ha implicates four others, including Marsh Land, a local lawyer, as well as two cousins and a brother-in-law. The evidence of Linton Carr, the defendant’s brother-in-law, agreed with Underhill and the state’s witnesses that Faulkenburg was the leader. Underhill displayed his arm in which a shot is still lodged. The defendant was sentenced to five years in the state’s prison. Chables Kohlmeykr, a young farmer of Knox county, was killed by being kicked in the breast by a Texas pony. As A result of the recent gas explosion at Lebanon the Lebanon Light, Heat and Power Co. is made defendant in a suit by Martin Hohl for $25,000 damages; $15,000 for personal injuries and SIO,OOO, for damage to his property. The controller’s certificate authorizing the Merchants’ national bank, of Muncie, to begin business, was issued a few days ago. Hardin Roads is the i president of the new bank, and a capital of SIOO,OOO w;ll be employed. It is semiofficially announced that the quartermaster-general of the United States army, through congress, -will establish a military post at Jeffersonville, where recruits for the army can enlist Seventy-five acres of ground necessary for barracks and other buildings and parade grounds will be donated to the United States by local capitalists at the proper time. The ground in question is located three miles west of Jeffersonville, fronting on the line of the P., C., C. and St L. railroad and the Ohio river. John Strahle, aged seventy-nine, a pioneer of Elkhart, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor, nearly severing his head. A few days before he placed himself in front of an approaching passenger train for the purpose of being run over, but was pulled from the track in time to save him. During the night he tried to strangle himself to death with a handkerchief. 11l health and the recent death of his wife are supposed to have unsettled his mind. Thousands of fine carp were set free in the White river, near Columbus, several days ago by the breaking of a levee which destroyed a large fishery. Zora Peyton has been appointed postmistress at Riddle. Some miscreant placed a dynamite cartridge under the G & I. C depot, at Brazil, but it was discovered before an explosion took place. The heaviest verdict ever returned in Madison county for personal damages was given fay a jury at Anderson, in the case of Joseph Beck, of Lebanon, against the Big Four Railway Co. It amounted to $5,500. At Columbus Ed Saladine, a tinner, 18 years old, fell from a scaffold that was fifty feet high and broke his back. His right arm and leg were also broken, the bones protruding through the flesh. He will die. A CAREFUL estimate of the wheat | crop of southern Indiana places 70 per | cent of the crop as good and 12 per j cent as fair. This shows no change in I the autumn condition- j

THOMPSON TESTIFIES.

Says the America* Panama Committee Was Conducted on Business Principles. Terre Haute, Ind., Feb. 2L— The congressional subcommittee sent by the Panama investigating committee to take the evidence of ex-Secretary R- W. Thompson arrived here Monday morning. Its members’are Storer (O.) and Patterson (Tenn.). They were driven immediately, with their stenographer. to the residenoe es ex-Secre-tary Thompson, who is in improved health. The ex-secretary first detailed the circumstances of his resignation, saying it was publicly done, and, further, he met no opposition from President Hayes when he approached him regarding the matter. The first offer of the American chairmanship was made to

RICHARD W. THOMPSON.

him by Jesse W. Seligman in 1880 and was not accepted until after full conference with friends and the president and the determination on his part ; that there was nothing inimical jto the interests of the United | States. He denied that the Hay as administration was opposed to the ! canal, but did not want it under American Control. He had the idea when he accepted the chairmanship of Americanizing the affair and tried te get an American construction company to build it. The entire administration, so far as he knew of the affairs of the I American committee, was on the strictest business principles. Col. Thompson said he did not know l what were the duties of the bankI ing houses, whose representatives were • members with him of the 4 mer ' can committee, and he was much surprised j when he learned within a week that S the three had been getting each $50,000 ■ a year, or each of them twice his own salary for their services in this couni try. Col. Thompson denied that the Panama Canal company had a lobby at Washington either to procure favorable legislation for the Panama canal or to fight the Nicaragua people, and he said he kept clear of the lobbyists and that there was no improper expenditure of money so far as he was aware of. Col. Thompson said: “When I saw it stated recently that $12,000,000 or some such sum was sent over here and placed to my credit that startled me. I now see the explanation of it. That must have been the sum paid these bankers, of which I knew nothing." CoL Thompson said that when the I Nicaragua treaty was before the senate all he did was to write a pamphlet again st it, which he had anonymously placed in the hands of all senators.

GEN. BEAUREGARD DEAD.

He Passes Away Rather Suddenly at New Orleans—He Was the East of the FullRank Confederate Oeuerals. New Orleans, Feb. 21.—Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard, the last survivor of the confederate military leaders who attained the full rank of general, died at 10:10 o’clock Monday night of heart failure. He bade his son good-night and was left with the sick-nurses, who have been kept within call since the commencement of his illness. He dropped quietly off to sleep and seemed to be resting well. A few moments after 10 o’clock one of the nurses went to look at him and was startled to hear the noise of the death rattle in his throat. The members of the family were quickly summoned, but before they reached the bedside the general had passed away. The funeral will be held Wednesday. [Gen. Beauregard was born at New Orleans in 1818. He was graduated from West Point military academy m 1838 and was at first assigned to the artillery, whence he was subsequently transferred to the corps of engineers. He served in the Mexican war and was twice wounded. He was promoted to a captaincy of engineers in 1853 and was on duty superintending the erection of government buildings in New Orleans and fortifications on the gulf coast till January, 1801, when he was for five days (January 23-28) superintendent of the United States military academy at West Point He resigned February 20, 18Si, to join the confederates, and began the civil war by the bombardment of Fort Sumter April 12, 1881. He was in actual command of the southern troops at Bull Run July 21,1801, in which the fcderals experienced a reverse: for this service he was made a brigadier general. He was second In command under Gen. Albert Sydney Johnston at the battle of Shiloh, or Pittsburg Landing, Tenn., April 6, 1862, and In the summer and autumn of 1863 successfully defended Charleston and Its outworks when besieged by Gen. Gilmore. He was subsequently connected with the army of Joseph E. Johnston in North Carolina up to the time of that general’s surrender, April 26, 1865. which brought the war to a close. At the end of the war he had attained the rank of full general, the highest grade in the service. Since the termination of the war Gen. Beauregard had resided In the southern states. He became president of the New Orleans, Jackson & Mississippi railroad, and for a number of years had been one of the managers of the Louisiana state lottery.

McKinley’s Loss Increases.

\ oungstown, 0., Feb. 21.—Tl.te amount of Robert L. Walker paper bearing the indorsement of Gov. McKinley will be *85,000, instead of SOO,OOO as reported. Cleveland, 0., Feb. 2L—Gov. MoKinley still remains in Cleveland awaiting developments in the Walker failure at Youngstown. The liabilities of the ; governor now amount to about $85,000. j The governor’s friends account for his | being so heavily involved by saying i that he supposed many of the notes he j indorsed were renewals of others Which I had been taken up, and that ne at no time believed he had loaned his credit for more than 120,090. __

The Royal Baking Powder is indispensable to progress in cookery and to the comfort and convenience of modern housekeeping. Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking powder offered to the public.— U. S. Gov't Chemist s Repott. For finest food I can use none but Royal.—A. Fortin, Chef, White House, for Presidents Cleveland and Arthur.

A Fab-Fetchxd Stoht.— Willie Wilt—• ••What do you think of our friend Spynne’s writings! Don’t you think he carries realism too far!” Maid Marian—“ Decidedly. He told me the other day that he had had to walk tlfirty miles to nnd a publisher.”— Truth. Market Reports— Pens and paper are stationary. , Cutlery is very dull. Cheese firm. Butter strong, but inclined to be slippery. Hops lively and active. Gunpowder Inclined to be rising. Jackson— “ Burton’s new house was completed to-day and the builder turned it over.” Mrs.-Jackson—“Oh. how dreadful, and to think of having to have, it all built up again.”—Chicago Inter Ocean. Mrs. Mcbcavado— “The Newyiches are people who don’t know who their grandparents were.” Mrs. Rockoil—“Oh yes, they they hope that no one else does.”

WORTH READING. Mt. Sterling, Ky„ Feb. 13, 1889. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Gentlemen ; —I desire’ to make a brief statement for the benefit of the suffering. I had been afflicted with catarrh of the head, throat and nose, and perhaps the bladder for fully twenty-five years. Having tried other remedies without success, I was led by an advertisement in the Sentinel-Demo-crat to try Hall’s Catarrh Cure. I have just finished 'my fourth bottle, and I believe I am right when I say I am thoroughly restored. I don’t believe there is a trace of the disease left. Respectfully, WM. BRIDGES, Merchant Tailor. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. ?S cent*.

Wi Ha. MW’ ju I* v %. 'BUS In Jw Grand New Flowers, Vegetables and Fruits. a A J2?T i sra5 ra J m6ntal Plant* lithe Weeping or Flllfcra Palm. It li stately and btiistif ill barond iwSfliiAfntoß? 1 !?? grown In any window as easily ns a Geranium, and Is a supnrb addition to any col-thTead-Uke* w'lraenU m^net'ndJi 8 * k* sn-sbaped leavesfrom which hang Tong, l^eftlncnlUvation aro l msSi^rwiuMi o >a ‘PP®"™™*-, In fact, there Isinotblng enly 3Cto we w*H send fey nuill*^>stpaiS, r a{lof'the^llow?Dg: a ’ Br,nlnat * 9UloklT Bn<l * rOW "far. For ? ZF?* 0 ranreßA FALK. Its chaste beauty will astonish you. l Oh** lo !** psaooek colors of aarivaled beauty. 1 5w tnam<m * NWMt Uly-Uko blossoms, to inches long, pure white. 1 *® Tcral feet *b4 boar many enormous heads of iloom. i I ‘ r ?‘ »a*w white and exceedingly frsgraaL | every color, shape aad size is represented. A aaifut novelty. | Bulba GLADIOLUS, beautiful named sorts, 1 white,.! pink, 1 scarlet, all saperb varieties. 1 pvwtito*ltDWAßF EXCZLBIOa enormoas spikes of elsgaat waxy blossoms. 1 Bulb ZkPHYE FLOWER lovely free bloomer; large blossoms of exquisite beauty. 1 Bulb CINNAMON VINE, fixe hardy elimber. and ear saperb BRONZE 8008, Catalogue of rare s t jlSsorV“and **• OmltSem tor c'o&XW •'/"K;‘^oac^f"i^ar^K. WlUeeQdfonr .n rt r.^ L « B r O J HE , FOLLOW, " B ~X EXTR * CHO, « COLLECTIONS BY MAIL, POSTPAIB. ‘a v L -^ n^in^l , f X “ i >«>«>*. & uaparail«ed offer Ut « LOVELY TUBEROSES, flowering bulbs, 2 TaU Double, 2 Dwarf Pearl and 2 New'Variegated 10* 3 AMARYLLIS, all elegant blooming vrrieties of great beauty .. ." :^ j :tu > b«w perpetual blooming plants of rare beauty *k ® OBAMD BLOWBRING CACTUS, 6 sorts named, including Might-Blooming Cereus f CHRYSANTHEMUMS, new giant flowered, ineluding rink Ostrich Flume and Gantne tl m. Engravings, Stipple Lithograph Covers and T beautiful large Colored pSte’*7 staudnrd varieties and novellipsin Flower and Vegetablo Seeds, Bulbs and piinuof all klndl and fl «r« new Fruit*. Also a great collection of Cacti, Flowering Shrubs. Caiihas, Acim“c Plante ThrvSjnX 0 mums. New Carnations eto. Also a large list of the finest rows at W cents eich mli. nf.r Japanero Wlneberry .TraUlng Queen Fuchsia. Yellow and Little Gem Callag. amLtastlr fil.t nmi ni CHfLDSI. the greatest floral novelty of this generation. Flowers 7 1 nch «stfnriis<«nr,i vIlTe kXC,^ 8 "Azg&tg issisja* kesnssa^ JOHN LEWIS CHILDS, Floral Park, Queens Co., N, Y. nStSh»£sU3&as

“THig will do for the present,” as the young man remarked when he paid for a box of oheap candy for his sweetheart’s birthday gift.—Philadelphia Record. When a man inherits a portion of a goodly estate he« has no trouble in finding people ready to “take his part.”—Yonkers Gazette. The “hew and cry” is generally raised by the,boy who has to chop up the stove wood. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. The economical housemaid Is an artist to a certain” extent. Sh'o “draws the purse strings.”—Boston Courier. When a man unexpectedly steps into a fortune, lie cannotbe upbraided for having put his foot in it—Puck. “A brush with the enemy,” as the fox remarked when he loft his tail in the trap.— Puck.

Stove polish 1

DO NOT BE DECEIVED with Pastes, Enamel*, sad Fatal* which (lain.l the hand*,lnjure th* Iron, and barn rede The HUtnrSun Stove PoMibrla Brilliant, Odor-1 leu. Durable, and the oonsnmer par* for ao Ua I or glase pachas* with every par***—. - I vmfluafj&vd That “the seaaau" at Hot Bpriaga, Ark., Is now opened and that the (fiicago &. Alton is the best tine from Chicago To HOT SPRINGS. The ••Alton**” “St. Louis Limited," the &urt daylight Veatlbuled Train from Chicago (ii:i« a. m.) to St. Louis (74J p. m.),in connection witi the special Hot Stx-fug* fast train of the "Iron Mountain Route," leaving St Louis in th* even, ing and arriving at Hot Springs the next morn, ing, makes positively over two hoars quicker run between Chicago and Hot Springs than aay train time * o fi <^ h * r ” ne ’ Allowing condensed Tims Table ot the Altos’* Hot Springs Through Uas. I 4 *" »■ *• kAy. »rSOp si today. Usv* BIAUtIMTOS .. 2:55 p.». today. I JO aa. hams. Amts H. LOWS 7:45 ka.tsd«r. 7:30 aa. tomorrow. Usti ST. 100 H 8:30 p.m. today. !* am. tomenvw. Airin HOT SWIGS .. 12:50 mss temarrov 5:30 Aa. Through Pullman Service from CHICAGO to HOT SPRINGS every day? The Chicago & Alton forms the first link in thn chain of four roads which, together, form The True Southern Route to California. This is unmistakably the moat comfortable winter route to the Pacific Coast, the travel** being exposed to no high altitudes or snow block* sde*, and having through Pullman service, sun* shine aad comfort right straight through from Chicago to California. _ Ask your home ticket agent or address thn undersigned for copies of illustrated and descrip, tlve pamphlets, folders and fiyers giving details of the •'Alton's" Hot Bprings and California through service. JAMCt CHARLTON, tuml rastesger as* TliM Amt, Cki«*s« * aims a. k, cG*m», Itk ASHARPJOKEj YET A POINTED FACT! ! IN 4 ACTB. AteJkp'X' - 10 Home Taeks eeiatss tsssrahaswss ; ssi.KiifaL , %a?*—, Ifsd* mUly fey lbs Rsvslty top*-. Atlas ktoaft Ossp*a. *TSs3Fir’ . FOR SALK EVERYWHERE. I inuitrsted PubtlesdonsT If |u k WITH MAP 8, 4w«lMa« iIC C aw^wsra - FREE GOVERNMENT A I*no LOW PRIORI A 41 A 4™ pSR LANDS tw Tfe» test ifritallarai, flrsilat ui Tinker Ua*. MW MM I* settlers. Bailee rasa. l«na B. UINU, Ua* Cm,*. P. B. S,,Su real. Bias. smtfAMS cuii fassam* Mas fan man Unuro T nowiced hopeless. From frit do* ..--.tswsya and In ten dayiatlaasttwo-thlrdeeTallaymptomiarejemojteS BOOK of testimonial* of miraculous cum teal FREE, m mwmkiiimmz.’ii pm**** IS!SL^ —‘Baas tais fina»w m. Jm wwm. SEED'K- H. BIIUM WAY, Itookrord, IIL jrSßkMM>\ •»-HAKn THU rapaa oust «oe yea «*to. MAKE NO MISTAKE. SHU’S! by lUdpath, th* historian, and ox-Obv. Connor of Maine. Only authorized life ot the great statesman, written by hie consent and assistance. Great book of the century. Agents wanted everywhere, on salary or commission. Send its cents to pay postage on grand tree ontilt. HISTORICAL PUB. CO.; BT. LOUM, UOi earßAMs trns rAniiom, <■)■«* ttiuiai Cures Sick Headache O-W. F. SNYDER, M. !>., MsJl ftiptfWf MoVlclror’e Theater. Chicago, t«. er-sAM* this r arm ...„ on. m .me. Li 111 C C «»'• *OUTRIBD thatßacelleatPreporatloa, A U I L O Madam D’Secor’s French Hair Carter, ter keeplsg the Hair la FIUZZ. Tea makeaaUeteke lire* ban act. i.k year for IL Prise, We per Sortl*. _OT All Wheieeele Uraggista in Chisago an* St Leals keep He ar * AHB THIS »AtBS SMC hmeysewlta , SH£!LS%l£H*Ba 22? e n e L? n ,^L D . t J’ d -, l ! oa il well{hb ‘' £‘ ,e * unparalleled. SH e Beyl Wrttt'qvick. Brohard Mfg. Cm., Phil*, toTBAMS IBIS PAFta M, lim, fjewnto. Agsnte Wanted for the Life and Public servlcesof JAMES C. BLAINE ?r8L r » < i‘s plet ®s o s pvb.; complete outfltmalled for 1(M. Address, National Pub. Co., Chicago. Ill* sj-cumz rms rArxhwwr m»«T«.wnu. KANSAS FARMS I h 11 FOR SALE* I SALIMA, KANSAS. 0-KA2OI nus eatss ensg Noe yes an*. $75.00 to $350.00 Johnson t c0.2a00.2-4-wi Main stauohmonu, vt aarWAm this yaPtawwr taw Ti«n>a 8— Jk P% 8181 gh Choice Farms In Hamlin Co, ■ ■% IwH 9 Write for particulars. UKEVBS ss awAßatsssf* “““»•■■- I Consumptives and people ■ who havo weak lungs or ma, should use Plso’s Cure for B Consumption. It has cured ■ thousands, it has not Injnr- ■ ed one. It Is not bad to take. H It Is the best cough syrnp. Sold everywhere. BSc. ■ i J 1" ™ r . a. WHE* WKrriKß TO AI>V«BTISIBS Pi eiffl •tat* that y«s sew the *■*—•* ■ |* (Ms